The Great Utopia

Outlines for a plan of organization and activity
of a democratic movement

(Submitted in agreement with the editors and friends
of Dinge der Zeit and Contemporary Issues)

1

For thousands of years tormented humanity has been laboring at the solution of the
disconsolate and trivial tasks of how to eat, dwell and live in security; for thousands of
years, it has yearned for a paradise from which it feels itself expelled and to which it
wishes to return. The theme which myths and fairy tales sing of, the force which impels
masses into movement, the desideratum of founders of religions, what philosophers have
brooded over, the object of the enquiries of scientists, the visionings of poets, the
achievements or aspirations of statesmen and revolutionaries  all revolve round
these two poles and are nourished, at root, only by the terrible necessity for securing
the perpetuation of life in good or evil. But all endeavor had to remain fantasy and
Utopia, the problem of humanity could, in the final analysis, find merely a temporary
regulation in evil as long as it was not possible to produce sufficient goods
for the satisfaction of even the most urgent needs of everybody. This decisive difficulty
was only removed by the so-called Industrial Revolution, which, towards the
middle of the last century, also encompassed Germany and America and constituted the basis
for the Communist Manifesto, which appeared in 1848, that is, for scientific
socialism in general.

2

To have elaborated the simple fact that the dream of humanity was not realizable
without definite material prerequisites (while at the same time proving that these
prerequisites were maturing) remains an historical act of sweeping significance  the
great merit of the much-maligned Marx and Engels. And as long as the material
prerequisites for a higher social organization have not been destroyed, there is nothing in
principle to obstruct the solution of the social question with which all
controversies are concerned.

In history, it is exclusively a matter of what has actually happened, not of what might
have occurred under different circumstances and conditions. It is purely and simply a
matter of historical fact that all progress has been achieved at the expense of the great
majority, that is, it has been accompanied by the rise and increase of the social
question. The social question is, in truth, but the form in which the struggle to assure
the continuance of human life is fought. Real Marxism (the original in contradistinction
to that caricature which demagogic falsifiers incessantly suck out of their thumbs and
abysmal ignorance assiduously diffuses) has always emphasized therefore, in every advance
of civilization, the social and human retrogression, implicit in the birth of the social
question.

3

Pursuing the contrast between civilizatory progress and social retrogression to its
ultimate consequences, Marxism posed the alternative  either Socialism or
Barbarism. If we fail to transform the capitalist mode of production into a
socialist mode, barbarism is no longer an abstract threat but assumes the sharply
delineated outlines for the doom of all modern society. World wars, like the last two and
the anticipated third, are, according to Marxism, integral constituents of the capitalist
system and as unavoidable as the increasingly closer interlacement of State power with
control over the means of production, accompanied by the revival of outright slavery and
the enormous growth of parasitic strata. War and civil war become the mode of existence of
bourgeois society; interventions by foreign powers are on the order of the day; nations
and national minorities are annihilated, expelled, dismembered and put under control; a
continually increasing percentage of the social product is devoted to the production of
means of destruction and to services and institutions connected with destruction, while
official begging for every sort of palliative and diversionary purpose
increases. Of particular importance is the one-sided civil war conducted against the
population in the Russian sphere of power which will extend over the whole world if the
present foundations are maintained, irrespective of whether fascism or western
democracy emerges as victor from the struggle for world domination.

4

Russia has not the slightest connection with Socialism or Communism whether
in the national or international, ideological or material sense. The nationalization of
the means of production which (for example, also in England) is misrepresented as
Socialism does not in the least alter the character of the economy as a
private profit economy (it remains irrelevant whether it is managed in the interests of
the old owners or of a new bureaucracy). It does not overcome a single one of the
devastating consequences of the capitalist system but rather drives these vehemently
towards that point where unrestrained Russian barbarism makes manifest the final outcome
of capitalist development. For this reason serious Marxists have denounced mere
nationalization as the crippled offspring of free competition and as a lever
of economic and political reaction. In addition, as against Stalinists, reformists and
supporters of private initiative, they have insisted unyieldingly and without
illusion that each last war would achieve neither freedom nor economic advance
but would only prepare the field for the fight for world supremacy. The more assiduously
the ideologists have contested this in the past and nurtured extravagant hopes, the more
they are cultivating today the melancholy recognition that two great
powers have remained who, with their respective satellites, will soon clash with
each other. But to acknowledge Marxism, for which the new conflict was only one among many
obvious matters, as the superior method of viewing the world  that, of course,
occurs to scarcely anyone.

5

The development of capitalist society was, in general, fully anticipated by Marxism in
all important respects and  with a painful certainty  especially in its
negative or destructive aspect. But the moment that this negative side predominates, and
thereby brings about the alternative effect (and this would happen when the proletariat
for whatever reason was unable to achieve or maintain the social revolution), it
signalizes that Marxism is broken up insofar as it represents a political system and bases
itself upon the working class as the fulcrum for development and as the force for the
accomplishment of the positive solution.

There is no longer any possibility of doubt in this direction: the classical
workers movement has perished through the betrayals of the Second and Third
International, and will never arise again. As a politically organized class 
symbolized by a party, capable of action, which intervenes in the struggles of the masses
and leads them purposefully with its own tasks and aims  the modern
proletariat has already suffered the threatened penalty of destruction or (as
in America) has never achieved political organization. The conception that the organized
workers would overcome the capitalist system and would, in emancipating themselves,
emancipate the whole of society, is at least historically obsolete. The political
dissolution of the workers movement is accompanied by the destruction of its
economic foundations, that is, by the extension of slave labor with little or no
mechanical equipment and which first became a mass phenomenon in Russia. Henceforth the
solution of the task falls directly on the overwhelming majority of mankind whose
interests increasingly coalesce and can be reduced to a common denominator socially as
well as nationally and internationally. The development is, via a detour, again
approaching the old Marxist ideal of a simultaneous turnabout in all or at least many
countries.

6

Having arrived at the utmost entanglement, the character of the social question is
transformed into its opposite: The problem becomes quite simple again and requires for its
solution in principle no other method than that by which Alexander unraveled the Gordian
knot. With it, the century-old controversy over Marxism has also become historically
redundant. For a long time already it has ceased to be a question of determining the
future course of historical development but has been one of utilizing sensibly an achieved
result. Since the material bases for the overcoming of the crisis of humanity demonstrably
exist, the task is reduced to a mere measure of administration which can be accomplished
with existing forces and means and can be enforced by democratic majority decision. The
position with regard to theoretical dispute is essentially the same as that of a
practitioner who is engaged in saving mother and child by a Caesarian operation and no
longer discusses whether historical materialism or Christianity is the correct doctrine. A
new consciousness of the practicability of the old Utopias of reason is
necessary and, at the height of confusion, will drive its way through. Antiquity took
centuries to die  bourgeois society came to birth only after long struggles and with
the help of bloody revolutions. The attempt to perpetuate bourgeois conditions is thus a
delusion. The alternative still is either Socialism (an economy for the satisfaction of
human needs) or Barbarism. The task therefore is to stimulate consciousness into making an
inventory of resources and into showing how and by what means the proposed aim is to be
achieved.

7

One must not expect miracles, of course. Less than ever is this a time for illusions.
The curse of blindness burdens bourgeois society and makes the perspective of
self-annihilation appear more realistic than the attempt at a rational change
of existing conditions. The destruction of productive capacity, of material and human
beings, repeated on an ever-increasing scale, is crowned by the possibility of an atomic
and bacteriological war  cold-bloodedly considered and recommended as the best
solution for the contemporary dilemma. But in wars lies not the only danger threatening
the existence of humanity. The higher the productive forces are developed and, under the
domination of capital, increasingly put to the service of aims of destruction, the more
rapidly are the natural sources of wealth exhausted. As long as the profit motive
determines economy, the celebrated control of nature on the basis of science remains
problematical in the highest degree and produces innumerable unforeseen
effects. Reckless exhaustion of agricultural soil; despoliation of forests, altering
watersheds, the courses of rivers, the water table and both the quantity and effect of
precipitations; extermination of fauna on the one hand and overgrazing of pasture land by
domestic herds on the other  all this denudes the land of its natural protection
against being washed and blown away by floods and winds (so-called erosion or land
cancer), the extent of which has of late evoked loud Cassandra cries on the part of
experts.

A further malignant effect of bad agricultural methods used for profit extraction is
the predominant or exclusive use of artificial fertilizer which reduces the nutritional
value of the foodstuffs produced (including fodder and the slaughter stock fed on it which
is in addition often bred at an artificially rapid tempo). To this must be added the
contamination, dangerous to life, of rivers and coasts through the excessive discharge of
industrial refuse (including many chemicals), urban dirt and human excrement urgently
needed on the land. It must be regarded as certain that all these factors, but especially
the one-sided use of chemical fertilizers, are responsible for the appalling increase of
heart maladies (disturbances of the circulation), of cancer and other modern plagues which
must be considered in the strictest sense of the word as production diseases.
Chemistry cannot replace Nature and the natural processes. In this way does violation of
the law already expressed by Justus von Liebig as a warning  Man must return to
Nature what he takes from her  avenge itself.

8

Capitalist development proceeds with extreme unevenness. It unceasingly revolutionizes
all relationships and produces colossal disproportions between town and country, between
the various branches of production and the different countries and continents. As a result
of this uneven development, the United States of America, which contributes only 7% of all
working people in the world, today participates to the extent of about 50% in world
industrial and over 20% in world agricultural production. On the basis of commodity
production a disproportion of such magnitude has immeasurable weight and impresses its
stamp on the rest of the development.

It is a great irony of history that Europe which once colonized the world is now
herself being depressed to colonial status by a former colony and, by means of
peaceful trade conferences, Marshall Plans, etc., is being put on rations
which are to confirm and consolidate the supremacy of the United States. In this process
Americas aspirations are not the result of any fantastic evil will but
of the innermost driving forces of the capitalist mode of production which draw Good and
Evil into their orbit and subject every impulse to their blind fury. We must learn to face
the cruel facts and to understand that German fascism, too, only exposed the deepest
essence of capitalism and its ultimate consequences, when it transformed the ever
extending I or You of free competition into the monopolist slogan of We
or You. This slogan corresponded to capitalist reality after the end of the first
world war. It formulated the compulsory situation created by the development which has
come to light in its full dimensions as a capitalist-historical inevitability
through the political events of recent years. With ineluctable lawfulness it was neither
Russia nor England but the United States which became both the author and the guarantor of
unconditional surrender, the Morgenthau Plan, the Potsdam Agreement, etc. The
real historical adversary of Germany and England was this very American imperialism which
recognized the Command of the hour and, in the person of Roosevelt, understood
how to maneuver the people into the war against their will. By him also the question of
We or You was quite clearly foreseen and included, apart from Germany and
England, also Japan, while Russia by force of circumstances could become junior partner to
a far greater degree than any other ally.

9

With Americas victory a power has overwhelmed the world, the mass production of
mediocre and inferior quality, which far surpasses all the other powers in importance and
which has both negative and positive effects.

By maintaining commodity economy, the negative side advances into the foreground. For
not only is it the basis of the existing world situation but also of the further
deterioration of the general situation in the economic, social, political, intellectual
and moral relations.

The same power, however, can become the point of departure for a contrary development.
Both theoretically and practically, the possibility exists in principle for still further
extension of mass production and for the alleviation of mankinds most urgent needs
within the shortest space of time. On the existing basis, with the elimination of waste
and superfluous industries (besides those of armaments, especially such as cause the
extinction of certain plant and animal species or the exhaustion of raw materials which
could be better utilized) it would at the same time be possible for quality production to
rise uninterruptedly, to establish a rational relationship between mass production (which
will always be necessary for certain types of human needs) and quality production, and to
make the boundaries between the two fluid through the improvement of mass
production. In this alone exists the basis for the simplification of the
social question, the practical solution of which is now the most important issue. In
principle or within range of the human will nothing else is necessary than the decision to
give free play to the production of really useful goods in every country on
earth and to distribute these (to the extent that they are exchangeable) in accordance
with the amount of labor time rendered.

Inexhaustible as human labor power (the producer of all values) are also
the possibilities of social and individual development once the fetters of commodity
production fall away, out of necessity, and man is able to assert himself freely and to
identify himself with the products of his activity (which will no longer be capitalist
labor).

10

In view of the dominating influence of American mass production, the fate of humanity
in the coming years depends primarily upon the further development in America. The purely
practical nature of the task to be accomplished immediately raises the question of
political organization, i.e. the political differentiation which has, throughout the world
with the exception of some colonial countries, passed through a retrograde movement
towards the complete disappearance of basic differences and which in America has not gone
beyond a rudimentary beginning. Among the important countries, America owes its
exceptional political position to the circumstance that it had enormous spaces to conquer,
that it could develop continuously in breadth and was never strongly compelled to explore
itself in depth to any great extent and so sharply to work out its political
contradictions. Whereas in the realm of Stalinism, it is the general poverty which has
permitted it to kill any political differentiation (and, in fact, to continue to kill it
for at least as long as external impulses fail to influence the development of Russia in
an opposite direction) in America, by contrast, it is the general wealth and the
perspective of world domination which binds the total consciousness and has so far
frustrated any considerable differentiation.

11

The so-called masses or broad layers of people alter their behavior in relation to
existing conditions only when incisive material changes occur and the utmost pressure
demands their adaptation to the new situation.

The movement of the masses is elementary and centers exclusively round the next
possible step. Because of their social situation, the theories and ideologies of the
political parties play a part for them only insofar as these refer to the next step
possible; the rest can be replaced indifferently by any words or can be completely
discarded without arousing the slightest shift in their behavior. When circumstances
permit they press forward with infallible instinct for their immediate needs and, in this,
invariably outstrip even their most capable and most willing leaders whereas, where there
is no way out, they retreat and seek to mitigate the effect of the altered conditions by
means of passive or active adaptation. Of course, it is to be noted that there are neither
homogeneous masses nor classes. Each stratum pursues its special needs and
there can be produced, on the average, more than an average effect, only then if
extraordinary circumstances put on the order of the day a decision for the whole nation,
the great majority of a nation or even (in the ideal case) several nations and all
interests are concentrated upon one point.

A democratic movement must know all this and base itself firmly upon it. It must learn
without cease from the mass strivings if it does not wish to be diverted into sterile
idealization, ideologizing and moralizing. To attain full clarity about its practical
activity it must know equally that there would be little hope of a change in the behavior
of the American masses if the perspective of world domination were more than ephemeral and
if, with the aggravation of world difficulties, the beginning of the decline in the
dominating country was not also indicated.

12

In capitalist society all institutions have the tendency to render themselves
autonomous, i.e. to alienate themselves from their original aim and to become an end in
themselves in the hands of those administering them. This is as true of the innumerable
State and semi-State institutions as of all parties and organizations, under no
circumstances excluding those which Labor has itself created for reasons political
(parties), economic (trade unions), cultural (freethinking, educational, sports
associations, etc.), or for reasons of mutual assistance (welfare organizations,
insurance, etc.). No matter what the erstwhile intentions may have been, with each new
institution, society in its totality has, in the long run, imposed on itself a new burden
which is more or less willingly and unwillingly borne, which has only the slightest
connection with the original aim, and which in the majority of all cases consists of pure
parasitism.

This tendency to become an end in itself, not only dominates the bureaucracies living
on the various institutions and organizations but also the individual professional groups.
It grows out of the division of labor (restriction to a definite field of activity which
one cannot leave, as a rule, without losing ones livelihood) and the general
competition which compels man to sell his capacities (reduced by the external relations),
his product and even his convictions, his dignity, his honor and his sexuality on an
ever-fluctuating market, which, only after successful hagglings, enables him to acquire a
greater or a lesser share of values, whether created by himself or by others, by means of
money (robbery, theft, cheating, collections, begging and the like are forms of
appropriation resulting from the intermediation through money).

Innumerable victims fall annually to this purely animal competitive struggle 
millions and millions must periodically be ruined absolutely unnecessarily because, under
a barbaric system, they must waste energy, happiness and health on the production of
things which, whether useful, valueless or harmful, suddenly become
unsaleable, over which they have no power of disposal and out of the
possession of which they are swindled partly by the mechanism of the system (in this
connection especially wars, trade crises, stock exchange crashes, inflation and the whole
currency complex), and partly by the innumerable parasites.

Along with the passive are to be found active victims  the subjectively honorable
or dishonorable employers, business men, managers, bankers, politicians, generals;
finally, the adventurers, stock exchange jobbers, gangsters, etc., who mutually maltreat,
harass, denounce, ruin, shoot each other or who  when the times change morals 
are solemnly hanged at Nuremberg and Tokyo according to all the rules of modern judicial
murder. Of course it makes a tremendous difference whether one is an active or a passive
victim, but all are prisoners of the system; for none does rational security
exist. It is, however, a tenfold misfortune for the working masses that in the course of
selling and buying back their labor power (the buying back occurs through the acquisition
of means of subsistence which as a general rule restores ever less than the average
expended labor power) those middlemen who are known under the collective name of
Labor bureaucrats have to be added to all their other burdens.

This bureaucracy is not merely an additional vampire (that is by no means the worst!)
but it also ruins the elementary mass movements, poisons the consciousness of many
individuals and bolsters up the system at a point where, on account of its brutality and
senselessness, it would be most highly vulnerable. The following assertion is no literary
exaggeration: The modern misery is the work of the Labor bureaucracy. If parties and
Labor parties today still have millions of voters and the trade unions
millions of members, it is not a reflection of any special confidence in them
except for family-and-friend circles of the bureaucracy which participate in the
parasitism. Their alleged influence is actually only the expression of the compulsory
situation (manifested as direct State compulsion in the Stalinized world) in which the
masses also find themselves because they must entrust themselves in the last
resort to one of the existing institutions as a result of tradition, habit, milieu or
chance criteria. The fluctuations in the organizations and at elections demonstrate that
the masses follow the political booms and experiment with the parties. In
spite of this, a changing percentage always remains outside the organizational and
election machinery, and long bitter experience has confirmed the old popular belief that all
parties are no good!

13

The problem of political organization accordingly focuses itself on the question of the
nature of a party which will be capable of performing its task and which will provide
guarantees against the degeneration which has always occurred. The answer is simple enough
and follows from the preceding investigations which permit no possibility for
misunderstandings and self-deception regarding masses, individuals and institutions or
their mutual interrelations. Once it has been granted that in capitalist society
everything without exception becomes a commodity on the one hand and that, on the other,
the most heroic idealism of single individuals as well as organizations conceived out of
the purest motives cannot protect itself against being transformed into an end in itself
(fetish) composed of many ramifications, it follows that it is primarily this process of
becoming autonomous which must be absolutely prevented by the layout of the organization.
In practice, therefore, the demand arises that political organization in the traditional
sense be destroyed thereby making possible a movement directed at the effective alteration
of the existing relationships. For the purpose of theoretical clarification, the following
is to be added:

The modern emancipation movements relied on theories and on the material interests of
the oppressed, mainly the proletarians. They fell of necessity into the most disgusting
degeneration, because although theories and material interests in themselves are, of
course, indispensable and cannot under any circumstances be excluded, they represent only
half of the necessary preconditions and in everyday practice afford no guarantee against
abuse, falsification, corruption, violation and fetishization. In contradistinction to
this, the democratic movement tries to find its guarantee, which historical experience has
proved to be indispensable, by directly revolutionizing from the outset all forms of
organization and activity, in their very forms. The attack on commodity
relationships in bourgeois society is directed first of all against the institution which
should provide the formal means for transformation, i.e. against its own party. These
formal means can be adequately characterized in the following way: The party must
incorporate and anticipate the organization of the future society in all essentials, that
is, it must manifest the outlines in skeletal form. By which is meant that first, it must
immediately begin within itself practically to dissolve bourgeois relations; and secondly,
that it must, as the party, be the direct (organic) dissolution of these
relations. Of course, in so far as it fights politically and organizes the political
struggle that completely belongs to the bourgeois sphere, it is in that respect still a
bourgeois party; and it is, at the same time, not a bourgeois party (or a party
at all) in so far as in the very act of constituting itself it departs from the bourgeois
framework, excludes by its structure any possibility of thingification (i.e. of becoming
an end in itself) and continuously cancels itself out as a party.

14

The formula of the party is directly its practice. The guarantees it provides are material
guarantees which are inherent in and inseparable from its existence. Its foundation is the
recognition that institutions are not to be protected by the people but the people are to
be protected from their ruin by the institutions. For what men may think of themselves
concerning the question of guarantees is of even less import than concerning other realms.
For the party only the uncomfortable thesis is valid that man is what he eats and what
conditions make of him. His nature is the nature of his environment  should he want
to change it he must begin by changing the conditions on which he depends. However, it is
not for ideological nor philosophical reasons but because of the inescapable need for
guarantees that the democratic movement decides to eliminate all illusions about men.

The democratic movement states that from the outset particularistic interests are no
longer to be pursued and demonstrates it not by idle phrases and solemn vows but by the
elimination of any possibility of exercising material domination over individuals or the
general public. Power and domination derive from the possession of money, the ownership of
means of production, the institutions and their bureaucracies. There must no longer be any
of this in the party: It must not invest any money in property, mortgages, and
undertakings; it must own no offices, houses, presses, in short, no apparatus whatever and
no appointed bureaucracy. Its guarantee against becoming a thing in itself thus resides
like a form of circular reasoning in its own presupposition: Incapable of incorporating
material interests within its framework and of dominating materially, it is also incapable
of representing class interests or political sectional interests. Whilst within it
material advantages and social security for a bureaucracy are unattainable, the special
party interest only exists in the sense of practically overcoming it for there is an
immediate transition to the general task of social liberation without domination by a new
class. Only on the basis of achieved freedom is the true special interest of the
individual reestablished which in capitalist society has no possibility of developing
itself and becomes reduced to the caricaturish types of profit-hungry, profit-producing
and profit-parasitic beasts.

15

The concept of the party is, of course, merely the beginning, but the beginning
immediately has in itself some peculiar consequences.

First of all, with the disappearance of the appointed bureaucracy, the material
distinction between leaders and members within the party relationships also
disappears. With it vanishes the need for an otherwise indispensable party
 or organization statute, and the quarrels arising from it. The party declares:
Statutes are exclusively for the protection of the bureaucracy; they provide the
juristic framework for holding the bureaucracy together and are the weapon
with which, in the spirit of bourgeois law, they defend their position, their privileges
and their interests against the members.

Furthermore, with the abolition of the bureaucracy, the party conception combats the
restrictions and disastrous effects of competition and the division of labor. To the
extent that division of labor exists in literary, propagandistic and organizational
activity, it is not dictated by the necessity of earning money and does not express itself
as a professional fixity. Competition, and the division of labor without a view to profit
and professional existence lose their capitalist form and are transformed into true human
self-affirmation; free competition as voluntary division of labor (in contrast to those
compelled by blind natural forces) in which the individual achievement no longer
contradicts the interests of society and true social equality is established, because all
places and manners of activity are interchangeable in principle. Within the voluntary
division of labor talent calls talent to the plan, whereas the professional bureaucrat,
driven by necessity, seeks to hold down any newcomer who might be able to make his
position disputable (from which again results the preparedness of the
bureaucrat to falsify all his articles of belief rather than to make room for
revolutionary ideas which do not correspond with his position). With the
removal of the bureaucratic caste the class-forming effect of the division of labor with
all its consequences accordingly disappears automatically for the party, by which means
the party is, on the one hand, the concrete dissolution of bourgeois relations,
and, on the other hand, initiates this dissolution in its relation to the environment.

Finally, after dispensing with statutes and the formation of castes, the external
organizational compulsion in the shape of discipline ordered from
above disappears as well as the prescribed party opinion which can be
interpreted ad lib by the bureaucracy, and which repulsively manifests itself in
the official tone, the intellectual superficiality, the political dilettantism
and the party style in its literature. In this way, the democratic movement
achieves a relation to all things which is determined purely by content: in accordance
with its peculiar layout it already combats formalism and schematism and insists on the
equal rights of all available means of expression. Free formation of opinion replaces the
internal discussions (all differences are brought outside and publicly
clarified) and replaces also the voting bound up with fractions, the bureaucratic
wangling, maneuvering, frauds and disciplinary proceedings. The sole
compulsion derives from the conscience of the individual who is prepared to stand up for
his views and actions and to accept correction but who no longer knows the ridiculous fear
of loss of prestige associated with concern for the maintenance of his
position.

16

In this way, the party has done away with all barriers between it and the environment
and has shaped with complete transparency for every man, both its relation to society and
its internal mechanism. Such a transparency, real, factual, immediately entering into
consciousness, of all relations is only possible where commodity economy has ceased to
exist with equal reality, factualness, immediacy. This aim is already achieved in the
party, and, as soon as the end of commodity economy with its social effects is postulated
and practically posed for it, other consequences come to light. This has become
theoretically and practically possible alone through material, intellectual and scientific
mass production on the present level of development, which, with equal
indispensability, includes the most abundant experience in connection with that production
on the one hand, and with State systems, movements, political parties, attempts at reform,
etc., on the other. The party now demonstrates tangibly that the most extreme complication
of the social question, as it is reflected in the party problem, tends indeed towards the
change into its opposite, i.e. it suggests a quite simple solution. Its demonstration
consists in the establishment of a system which, in its very functioning, precludes
substantial aberrations, rendering impotent from within the party activity tending towards
becoming a thing in itself, and for this purpose reducing it to a purely administrative
task. The reduction of the universally enslaving commodity economy to an administrative
task (unrestricted production capable of expansion and its distribution in accordance with
the amount of labor time rendered, until a point is reached where the absolute
surplus of wealth also makes counting of hours superfluous and liberates creative forces
as yet unimagined) is the strategic goal of humanity  the party accordingly enters
everywhere into the generally desired dissolution of the existing conditions and serves as
a living model for the transformation of the whole of society.

The only thing at all in the party which still has any commodity tinge
about it is connected with its literary activity, but the tinge is merely the extraneous
connection with capitalist conditions and has the same significance for the party as for
any working person who, a party man in his private life, brings his labor power as before
to the market and, nevertheless, does not receive the slightest profit. On the
literary side the dissolution of the commodity contradiction is (as spiritual production,
which must find its printed expression, which must be sold as printed material
and which must be renewed) provisionally one-sided and therefore assumes a
special form. This must be understood in the following way:

A political movement which desires to alter conditions that have become unbearable
cannot take a single practical step without revolutionizing the ruling conceptions that
have also become unbearable, without, that is, disclosing the dependence of the
intellectual on the material misery. To accomplish its task it needs a general and special
literature serving propaganda and agitation. The means required for this will be supplied
by members, friends, sympathizers, but must be so arranged and used that the literature
created on the part of the movement does not lead to a new commerce in
commodities but maintains the strict character of pure utility (in this case for the
satisfaction of intellectual, political, social needs). The utility character of
literature is preserved within the movement when it is no longer produced for profit nor
expounds any professional or commercial interests. In other words, the literary
contributions must be, firstly, plain contributions in the literary sense of
the word and should yield neither fees nor royalties nor anything else for the
authors; secondly, in the sale of literature, the already mentioned offices, employees,
canvassing on a percentage basis, etc., must disappear; thirdly, any surplus from the sale
of literature must be returned to production and serve its expansion (in the ideal case,
possible surpluses make contributions and donations quite redundant from a certain point
on).

It is this limitation of commodity economy in the party which transforms its material
affairs (and in perspective that of the State which will no longer be a State
as the instrument for the domination and the protection of the profit interests) into a
transparent task of administration or of distribution that every normal individual after
successful attendance at elementary school will be able to master easily. It is the
liberation of humanity and the party from the party (from the State in miniature which,
like the full-scale prototype, has a penetrating stench of business) and the most
significant consequence of this liberation is the direct connection and even the
coalescence of the party with the masses.

17

Coalescence or identification of the party with the masses has as its precondition an
organic reciprocity between the two. In this connection, the highest valid principle is
the recognition, which has become increasingly widespread since the time of Adam Smith,
that the differences in natural talents between individuals are in reality much less than
we believe. About such differences, Adam Smith says that they are not so much the cause
as the effect of the division of labor. To which Marx added concretely that In
principle there is less difference between a navvy and a philosopher than between a
watchdog and a greyhound. If this recognition is implemented, then the first step
towards the dissolution of the masses, towards their individualization, has been taken; it
will be implemented, however, and is identification with the masses,
when the party directs its entire activity to the overcoming of the conditions of mass
existence (historically generated and now become historically superfluous).
The party enjoys a right to existence only as a tool which, like production capable of
unlimited development and applicability, is nevertheless susceptible to being handled by
the masses themselves. No matter what the external political conditions may be; whether
those of illegality (as in Stalinist Europe and Asia, and some colonies); of semilegality
(e.g. Western Germany, where one needs a license, which is really an
officially supplied and voluntarily worn muzzle); or of legality  the
organizational life of the party is marked always by simplicity and clarity, always
thousands of unprepared people can enter and direct it, always it remains transparent to
and controllable by all.

Once again, this is achieved by the concept of the party which knows that under
capitalist conditions the masses are excluded from theoretical understanding and that
therefore it can only be grasped by them or penetrate their consciousness as a practical
movement. Since in the conditions described here nobody has any longer the opportunity to
attain to a higher social prestige by means of the party than that which he enjoys
independently of it; since the party no longer elevates itself materially above the
conditions of mass existence and introduces a division of labor voluntary
throughout, it coalesces with the people and arouses their deepest need: The need for
individualization and quality production (suppressed in the midst of capitalist
barbarism); the expansion of this quality production will end the mass life with its
barracks, living hells, labor slavery and the eternal cycle (war, crisis, hunger,
epidemics, bad bread, potatoes, ersatz, stultifying newspapers, etc.).

Taking for its point of departure the all-sided suppressed need for individualization,
the democratic movement decisively refuses to repeat the shortcomings of all political
organizations and to descend in its literary activity to the level of alleged
popularity, something the masses from the cradle to the grave have had more
than enough of, because it is the level of their conditions of existence maintained by
force. Here a parallel has become evident. The more material mass production increases
under capitalism, the greater the misery of humanity  the more the
Workers Parties have devoted themselves to intellectual mass production,
the less have they been able to satisfy any needs and the more intensively have they
contributed to the general decline and servitude of the masses. The liberation of mankind
can only be accomplished when as many individuals as possible have at their disposal
sufficient knowledge and fight with its help against literary, scientific, artistic and
political deception, against stupidity and sham knowledge in every form. Love of truth
based on ignorance manifests itself in the political sphere as demagogy and idiocy; proved
knowledge enables the movement to understand the impulses of the masses, to lend them
striking political expression and to illustrate that the problem of liberation from
capitalist insanity is for the masses no theoretical but a practical problem. Only from
practical progress do increasing numbers of individuals find access also to the theory
which is absolutely necessary for the movement: they emerge, that is, from the masses and
become conscious conquerors of bourgeois conditions, which in the same measure rest upon
the material and spiritual servitude of the masses.

18

Ideas do not drop from the sky. Intimate acquaintance with philosophy and scientific
discipline; lengthy, extensive experiences, investigations and reflection in the manifold
fields; repeated starts, deviations and experiments; to which must be added the change in
the total world situation brought about by the absolute economic preponderance of
America, which arose during the second world war  all this was required in order to
arrive at the following results: That (a) the idea of a movement could be
conceived, the essence of which is only to be sought in its relation to the environment
and which has an independent existence through nothing else but the constant renunciation
of this existence, in its connection with its contrary (the masses individualizing
themselves). That (b) the movement should base itself politically upon an
economic plan which contrary to all previous endeavors takes world economy and the
immediate possibility of the increase of wealth as its point of departure, which rejects
the rule of the proletariat as an absurd contradiction, and for the first time
wants to overcome bourgeois society only with such means as the latter has itself
organically produced.

The simplicity of the formula for the party and the plan is the outcome of a
development appearing to be almost hopelessly complicated. Being is becoming and becoming
is being. The greater passes through the smaller; freedom grows out of servitude carried
to its end. It is the same with the democratic movement as with all other things  it
is, while it becomes; it becomes, while it is. But as
a party it has so specifically constituted itself that it only represents
incomplete Being and can at no time deprive itself of the highest wisdom which
has ever been expressed. The educator must himself be educated.

JOSEF WEBER
1950

From Contemporary Issues: A Magazine for a Democracy of Content #5 (London,
1950). I have omitted the numerous and often very lengthy footnotes, which provide
documentary elaboration on the points in the text but are not necessary to the main
argument.